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SHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1933 MODEST MAIDENS _ I lie aweke at dewn and think : How sad it is all over town Lie other Freezing souls like me Who have to put the twindow down. s | vl DRIFTS USEDT® PUE | REMEMBER. (JE GoULDNT UP S0 You CouLbNT SEE OVER THEM CROSS Tie STREET CERTANY WAS MORE Herw! i Gow' DIG A CAVE YES-AD STAY THERE SNow IN THE oLp DAYS et Mc:mr::;fi!"s 00 -0-0-0-0 ! CAN | HELP JoEY ? “YOUNG MEN WHO TALK ABOUT THE SPEED OF MODERN LIFE UBUALLY ARE TRYING TO KEEP UP WITH SOME GIRL." LETTER-OUT 3 THOUGHT 1 SAW WELL, 1 HAVEN'T wiv, HE'S NoT Gowe: | . Letter-Out and a self-shaver does BACK=- HE WAS EXPELLED et eila HELLO, SANDY- SEEN MUCH OF HIM | iy | EROM THAT PRIVATE ORNING= OLG YOU'D BETTER VET,.BUT ENOUGH=- GOSHEN ' SCiDor PHINEAS ALWAYS STAY INSIDE=- WHEN A PRIVATE Tetter-Out and It's torn apart e soe s T SCHOOL THROWS ouT IN i 2 - HA AFE, SINCE A PAYIN' CUSTOME! RESOUNDED | l | H:§»¢¥E¥h‘|’sb—rfifiu TROUBLE WITH ELMER CAME 2 THESE TIMES, HE | | ENOUGH TFO PUT UP HIM YET- BACK, FROM MUST - BE l l Letter-Out and stores sell that WITH, WITHOUT You'LL SEE- WHAT | HEAR= PRETTY BAD, EHQ ELMER PINCHPENNY? Letter-Out and a brainy man does this. KNIGHTS 1 2 3 RATLINE 4 5 BESTIR T — Remove one letter from each word and rearrange to spell the word called for in the last column. Print the letter in center column opposite the word you have removed it from. If you have “lettered-out” correctly Chinese make | noise with these. i ' Letter-Out for an Indian group. 5 Answer to Yesterday's LETTER-OUT. BEGAT | B| & and that's ove way GATE REQUITAT. | AUA [Nemmt 2 0o B0 B Letter-Out and we are on our SR CHANGE FOR A TEN == €, T JusT_Found | H SLIP ME BACK MY TEL SPOT RAVELING | R I ek Jsgvr:t’ \F So-T'LL PAY You ouT X HAD A DOLLAR AND TLL SLIP You THe LEAVING BILL IN MY VEST —_—— ) . Letter-Out and it's pretty bad. POCKET ! DRIVEL |D| %, : : = Y ¢ VILER I s Letter-Out and it was torn apart. (Copyright, 1933.) Daily Cross-Word Puzzle OH-IF ONE OF THEM 7 : g WHY YOUNG FEATHERBRAINED - - ; FARDON ME CERTAINLY, . I WAS AFRAID * FLOOZIE’S AST YOUL o7 MY OEAR EpMAS ) LORD EGYPT MIGHT TO DANCE I BET You'D ) ! BUT MAYI HAVE PLUSHBOTTOM. : CATCH A COLD. *BUST A LEG QUICK 4 4 A ENOUGH HOPPING UP, ! MOONSHINE ! Across. . Norse god of war. . To rub lightly. 10. By. . Lofty mountain. . Charitable. . Thrust. 14. To form a network. . Large wading bird. . Separation. . New converts. . The elbow. . Having one or more right angles. . Abandoned. . Masculine nickname. . Openings. . Became thinner. . Moist. . Strength of wine, . Emphasizes. . Outermost series of leaves of a|25. Giant clam. | flower, . Reward on which a price may not . Married women. be set. i SNN COUSIN JO&Y . Company of fis . Art of public speaking. 1S THE HARD . Heroine of & famous ballad, . Overlapping edge. CCHA ;‘ S— . Source of distress. | 30. To preserve. MPEEN' THREE AN HO HELL BE YTEARS AGO HE STUMBLED LAST & - OVE!| . { OoLp EIGHT YEARS . Member of a chapter 31. Winglike part FI' YEARS AGO HE FELL R‘BR! ?fg%@'\g‘:‘:’;zfimg YEAR. HE BROKE S YOUR. OLE ON HIS NEX” . Genus of tailless amphibians 2. Close friend (collog.). ’ AN’ BROKE. MIS LEG! THE HE BROKE. M Ky = HIS NOSE. PLAYIN i CousIn ACCIDENT ! . Purgative tuber of a Mexican plant. | 34, Irregularity of surface in a wall, g S LIL FOOTEBALL! 5. Dispateed. . Chemical suffix, A . FINGER PLAYIN s . . Easily moved. . County in Florida. - | English coins. . Machine for burnishing skins. | SENE ByRNes BASEBALL! . Malay garment 2. Inventor of the steam engine. . Wet with melted fat. . External angle. . Fright. . | 44. Urgent pressure. | . Proceeds laboriously. . Lure. . Weird. 7. Wavy, in heraldry. | I N"'fl"nl . Fish of tropical seas. . Famous master of Syracuse. Happens . Brazilian monkey. . Turkish statesman. . Hereditary. . Winter vehicle. | Nourishing. . In behalf of. Distribution of gifts of charity. -In the direction of. To bring up for discussion. e ) : fii‘,fi,;’;“’o’}“a“‘f";fifi.,s 1dy1L. | Mother-of-Pear] Blonde Next. Dowwy | Platinum bl?ndes 1mul;st gife way éo the “mother-of-pearl” blondes, accord- L Senditinees of e ing to the League of German Hairdress- . Early inhabitant of Scotland | ers. The new mode, which was shown | Tllustrious Italian family. |8t a display in Berlin, promises to set - eariv . | the hu}u J‘asmo:x for lhoL; geason. 1t : f | gives the hair the color right gold, | WAL L HEA S & e | shot with silver and rose, so that the | Bocks "COF s SIS 7 V=~ 1 : WAL, HE ALLOWS AS 'SPECIALLY WHEN | Food fish. whole has a continually changing opa- | TOOK OUT YESTIDDY WAS OVER HOW HIT'S KINDA TOLGH THIS HERE'S TH TIME = o= illne sheen. | TO SEE HIM FER TO BE LAID UP AN i OF YEAR TNEYBUSUALLY T e T T T T ot S LR | LAST NIGHT AMISSIN' OUT ON TH' PULL OFF TH' BEST 4 ANSWER TO YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE. | 3 ERE GOINGS-ON HMERE- BAMIK ROBBERIES Pupils Are Manicurists. | Z —a 3 ABOUTS -.- EMEL ’I‘hfi };:mdmlsblsr of a Cbzce:huslovncl BCIARO ®) “Dotherboys Hall” in Subcarpathian if i z & IN] |Russia is a locksmith, barely able to| e 3 ;r?d and white, and without teaching/ By [Siu] qualifications, according to a Prague (g v [EIS] |newspaper. The man's wife compelied |- L.HUNTLED the children to chop wood, wash clothes, | sweep, scrub and polish the floors, feed | the pigs, clean the styes, and manicure her nails. She Gives Party at 106, | _When Mrs. Rachel Macarthur of | Granton, Scotland, neared her 106th | birthday anniversary she decided that it should be fittingly celebrated, and | when the day arrived she had 20 guests {at her party. From scores of friends ‘and relatives she received gifts,